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Japan still haunted by idea of militarism

By Tom Clifford | China Daily | Updated: 2012-12-20 08:06

A new day is dawning in Japanese politics, or so its next prime minister, the nationalist Shinzo Abe, whose grandfather-in-law served in the Hideki Tojo war cabinet, would have us believe.

The trouble is that a new day for Abe will break with a rising sun. The timing is profound, as if history was mocking us. As China marked the 75th anniversary of the Nanjing Massacre, Japan re-elected as its prime minister the grandson of an official at the heart of the war machine.

Abe's grandfather-in-law, Nobusuke Kishi, was jailed after the war as a suspected war criminal but went on to become prime minister - as if Albert Speer had become a postwar West German chancellor. For all but less than four years of the last 60 years Japan has been governed by the Liberal Democratic Party.

Japan still haunted by idea of militarism

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